We have a main WinForms application that hosts WPF forms - these forms are started with their own dispatcher thread using this code:
if (Util.MultiThread) { // http://reedcopsey.com/2011/11/28/launching-a-wpf-window-in-a-separate-thread-part-1/ // http://eprystupa.wordpress.com/2008/07/28/running-wpf-application-with-multiple-ui-threads/ Thread thread = new Thread(() => { try { // Create the application object and load WPF resources Program.EnsureApplicationResources(); System.Windows.Window w = wpfForm(); System.Windows.Forms.Integration.ElementHost.EnableModelessKeyboardInterop(w); w.Show(); // When the main form OR window closes, shut down the dispatcher w.Closed += (s, ea) => w.Dispatcher.InvokeShutdown(); CommandInvoker.MainFormRef.FormClosing += (s, ea) => w.Dispatcher.InvokeShutdown(); System.Windows.Threading.Dispatcher.Run(); } catch (Exception ex) { ShowException(ex); } }); thread.SetApartmentState(ApartmentState.STA); thread.Start(); }
One of our WPF forms frequently gets the error shown below and crashes, after which, the WPF form can no longer be opened and the application has to be restarted to restore this. We cannot produce this on demand, but it can happen several times a day. We have tried using v15.1.20151.2055, but the issue still occurs. None of our actual code is being accessed based on the stack trace, but Infragistics.Controls.Charts.XamDataChartView.OnTemplateProvided() seems to start the issues. Can some one explain what this class/method chain is doing that might cause this issue or something else that might be causing this.
Actual stack trace:
System.InvalidOperationException: The calling thread cannot access this object because a different thread owns it. at System.Windows.DependencyObject.GetValue(DependencyProperty dp) at Infragistics.SafeSetter.Apply(DependencyObject target) at Infragistics.SafeSetterCollection.Apply(DependencyObject target) at Infragistics.SafeSetters.<.cctor>b__0(DependencyObject o, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.OnPropertyChanged(DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.OnPropertyChanged(DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.NotifyPropertyChange(DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs args) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.UpdateEffectiveValue(EntryIndex entryIndex, DependencyProperty dp, PropertyMetadata metadata, EffectiveValueEntry oldEntry, EffectiveValueEntry& newEntry, Boolean coerceWithDeferredReference, Boolean coerceWithCurrentValue, OperationType operationType) at System.Windows.StyleHelper.ApplyStyleOrTemplateValue(FrameworkObject fo, DependencyProperty dp) at System.Windows.StyleHelper.InvalidateContainerDependents(DependencyObject container, FrugalStructList`1& exclusionContainerDependents, FrugalStructList`1& oldContainerDependents, FrugalStructList`1& newContainerDependents) at System.Windows.StyleHelper.DoStyleInvalidations(FrameworkElement fe, FrameworkContentElement fce, Style oldStyle, Style newStyle) at System.Windows.StyleHelper.UpdateStyleCache(FrameworkElement fe, FrameworkContentElement fce, Style oldStyle, Style newStyle, Style& styleCache) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.OnStyleChanged(DependencyObject d, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.OnPropertyChanged(DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.OnPropertyChanged(DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.NotifyPropertyChange(DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs args) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.UpdateEffectiveValue(EntryIndex entryIndex, DependencyProperty dp, PropertyMetadata metadata, EffectiveValueEntry oldEntry, EffectiveValueEntry& newEntry, Boolean coerceWithDeferredReference, Boolean coerceWithCurrentValue, OperationType operationType) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.SetValueCommon(DependencyProperty dp, Object value, PropertyMetadata metadata, Boolean coerceWithDeferredReference, Boolean coerceWithCurrentValue, OperationType operationType, Boolean isInternal) at System.Windows.DependencyObject.SetValue(DependencyProperty dp, Object value) at System.Windows.Data.BindingOperations.SetBinding(DependencyObject target, DependencyProperty dp, BindingBase binding) at Infragistics.Controls.SeriesViewerView.OnTemplateProvided() at Infragistics.Controls.Charts.XamDataChartView.OnTemplateProvided() at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.ApplyTemplate() at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCell(Int32 cell, Boolean forceInfinityV) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCellsGroup(Int32 cellsHead, Size referenceSize, Boolean ignoreDesiredSizeU, Boolean forceInfinityV, Boolean& hasDesiredSizeUChanged) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCellsGroup(Int32 cellsHead, Size referenceSize, Boolean ignoreDesiredSizeU, Boolean forceInfinityV) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureOverride(Size constraint) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCell(Int32 cell, Boolean forceInfinityV) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCellsGroup(Int32 cellsHead, Size referenceSize, Boolean ignoreDesiredSizeU, Boolean forceInfinityV, Boolean& hasDesiredSizeUChanged) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCellsGroup(Int32 cellsHead, Size referenceSize, Boolean ignoreDesiredSizeU, Boolean forceInfinityV) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureOverride(Size constraint) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCell(Int32 cell, Boolean forceInfinityV) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCellsGroup(Int32 cellsHead, Size referenceSize, Boolean ignoreDesiredSizeU, Boolean forceInfinityV, Boolean& hasDesiredSizeUChanged) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureCellsGroup(Int32 cellsHead, Size referenceSize, Boolean ignoreDesiredSizeU, Boolean forceInfinityV) at System.Windows.Controls.Grid.MeasureOverride(Size constraint) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at MS.Internal.Helper.MeasureElementWithSingleChild(UIElement element, Size constraint) at System.Windows.Controls.ContentPresenter.MeasureOverride(Size constraint) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.Documents.AdornerDecorator.MeasureOverride(Size constraint) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.Controls.Border.MeasureOverride(Size constraint) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.Window.MeasureOverrideHelper(Size constraint) at System.Windows.Window.MeasureOverride(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.FrameworkElement.MeasureCore(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.UIElement.Measure(Size availableSize) at System.Windows.Interop.HwndSource.SetLayoutSize() at System.Windows.Interop.HwndSource.set_RootVisualInternal(Visual value) at System.Windows.Window.SetRootVisualAndUpdateSTC() at System.Windows.Window.SetupInitialState(Double requestedTop, Double requestedLeft, Double requestedWidth, Double requestedHeight) at System.Windows.Window.CreateSourceWindow(Boolean duringShow) at System.Windows.Window.ShowHelper(Object booleanBox) at EnergyEndeavors.Util.<>c__DisplayClass8.<StartWPFWindow>b__4() in c:\Projects\VS_Infragistics_15.1\MontereyApp\EnergyEndeavors\Util.cs:line 110
Hello Gary,
Thank you for your post!
I have been investigating this issue, but I haven't been able to reproduce it as of yet. However, the code that you have included does raise a couple of questions on my end, since I am not entirely sure what your wpfForm() and EnsureApplicationResources() methods are doing. I imagine wpfForm() is simply returning the Window to be shown, but I could be mistaken.
I have attached the sample project that I have been using to try to reproduce this issue you are seeing. Could you please take a look at it and modify it so that it includes a more accurate representation of the EnsureApplicationResources and wpfWindow() methods so that I can see what you are seeing on my end?
Please let me know if you have any other questions or concerns on this matter.
Sincerely,AndrewAssociate DeveloperInfragistics Inc.www.infragistics.com/support
Thanks, I have attached a quickly updated file set - this includes the EnureApplicationResources() method, but some DLL inclusions are probably needed for this to compile) - essentially, this loads XAML needed for customizing a XamGrid and that requires a stock Infragistics generic XML file.
We are not able to produce this on demand, so any insight you can give to what these methods are doing might help:
at Infragistics.Controls.SeriesViewerView.OnTemplateProvided() at Infragistics.Controls.Charts.XamDataChartView.OnTemplateProvided()
Thank you for the updated project. Unfortunately, I am still unable to reproduce this threading issue you are seeing. I have been digging into the source code of the XamDataChart to find the OnTemplateProvided() methods, as you requested. Being that this issue seems to be spawning from a SetBinding operation within the OnTemplateProvided methods, I will focus on them.
It appears that the SeriesViewerView.OnTemplateProvided is retrieving the SeriesViewer for the XamDataChart and applying a few different bindings for the crosshair layers, tooltip layers, the outer border of the chart, and the zoom bar if it is enabled. Most of these bindings are for the Style property, but the outer border has bindings to its BorderBrush, BorderThickness, and Background properties as well. All of the paths for these bindings being set are retrieved from the SeriesViewer.
The XamDataChartView.OnTemplateProvided is an override of the SeriesViewerView one. The differences are that the bindings are set only on the zoom bar with respect to its Visibility property. There is also a binding to the presenter of the background of the plot area for its Content property, but I don't believe this is what is causing the issue.
Are you using any sort of styling for crosshair layers, tooltip layers, or zoom bars in the chart that is crashing in your application?
Just checking in, did you still require assistance on this matter?
Hi Andrew, we haven't made any progress on this so far. We have tried a few different things to try and get classes initialized before anything starts but to no avail. It seems as though there is some global object that gets initialized in one thread and stays alive for the life of the application -> once the user gets this error opening a screen, they will continue getting the error each time they try to open the screen until they close the entire application and re-open it (which is extremely costly due to the critical and large/complex nature of the application itself). Any thoughts on an object that is initialized once and stays in-scope even if the window containing the XamDataChart is closed?
We still don't have much to go on. A weird coincidence seems to be that this has happened more when a user's computer was re-booted from a Windows update - 3 users experienced this error all after being rebooted from a Windows update (and hence having to restart the app) - this has happened twice now, but I have not been able to simulate this and it seems to far removed from the actual app to be an actual trigger.
If you have any thoughts on a magical method call we can use to pre-initialize objects, please let me know (I tried this.show() right after the InitializeComponent() call in he constructor for the window containing the control to try and force any one-shot initialization, but that didn't help).
I am not sure this issue can be avoided by pre-initializing objects, as I believe what is causing it is that somewhere in your application a static resource is being created that does not get destroyed when a window is closed. Since these windows are in threads of their own, then when another window opens up, this static resource is still owned by the old thread, and hence, you see the exception that you are seeing. I also have my doubts that this is coming from a re-boot after a Windows update, but I cannot be entirely sure on that.
I am curious if there are any styles or themes that you are applying to the XamDataChart itself that you could possibly provide. If there are, would it be possible for you to modify the application that I had sent to include these applications of these styles? Also, how many series do you have in the problematic chart? What kind of axes are you using? Any details on your XamDataChart that you can provide to help me to reproduce this issue are welcomed, as I can't really be too sure how to proceed with this unless able to reproduce this crash that you and your users are seeing.
Yes, this is a difficult one to figure out. Our application is huge (and proprietary), so I can't send it as is. In the past with these issues, I have cut down the application to just the offending code base to provide an example app, but with this issue, I don't have a predictable way to reproduce it. That being said, I will try to reduce code down to a working example that preserves the flow of code execution, but it will take some time.
Thanks!
E.
I apologize for the delay in my response.
That is interesting that setting the CrosshairLineStyle, CrosshairToolTipStyle, and ToolTipStyle to a new, empty Style object seems to be preventing this issue. After some investigation on this, I had taken a look at the default style file for XamDataChart with regards to the default styles for these three issues, and each of them have a SafeSetterCollection in common, which is referenced in the stack trace of the exception you are referring to.
Regarding whether or not there is any development work happening regarding a bug fix for this, I am not aware of any at the moment, as I haven't found anything in our internal tracking system, but there wasn't much to go on up until this point, as this narrows things down to those styles that are being applied to the XamDataChart.
I will be investigating and discussing this issue with our development teams with regards to these styles and the operations that are happening within the SafeSetters to try to get a better idea of what is happening here. I hope to have more information for you on this matter soon.
Sincerely,AndrewAssociate Developer
Hi Andrew, we still don't have a good mechanism to reproduce this problem, however, based on a Google search for the error stack trace specifics, this article came up:
http://es.infragistics.com/community/forums/t/51368.aspx
Based on the information posted, we extended the XamDataChart class like this:
public class XamDataChartEx : XamDataChart { public XamDataChartEx() : base() { this.CrosshairLineStyle = new Style(); this.CrosshairTooltipStyle = new Style(); this.ToolTipStyle = new Style(); this.Brushes = new BrushCollection() { new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Red), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Blue), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Black), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Orange) }; this.MarkerBrushes = new BrushCollection() { new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Red), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Blue), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Black), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Orange) }; this.Outlines = new BrushCollection() { new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Red), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Blue), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Black), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Orange) }; this.MarkerOutlines = new BrushCollection() { new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Red), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Blue), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Black), new SolidColorBrush(Colors.Orange) }; } }
and switched out our XamDataChart references with this extended version, and that seems to have prevented this error from happening over the past few weeks. The article implies that the XamDataChart must not be multi-thread safe in some way, possibly from trying to use shared/default resources that get created in a thread other than the thread the chart is created in. Are you aware of any bug fixes or other work for resolving these issues? We seemed to have experienced similar problems when upgrading to the latest version and trying to use the new WPF spinner control - we ended up falling back to a previous version due to stability concerns.
For a previous work around to get a feature on the XamGrid, we created an extended version of that and had to pre-load XamGrid version of "generic.shared.xaml" from the Infragistics install directory "C:\Program Files (x86)\Infragistics\2015.1\WPF\DefaultStyles\XamGrid". This file's content does not match with the corresponding one in the XamDataChart and I am wondering if this was/is creating some kind of initialization conflict between these two controls/files? We are not pre-loading the XamDataChart version of this file. The code for pre-loading is executed in Program.cs before any windows are opened and looks like this (the main application is a WinForm that interops with WPF):
public static vEnsureApplicationResources() { if (System.Windows.Application.Current == null) { // create the Application object System.Windows.Application app = new System.Windows.Application(); app.ShutdownMode = System.Windows.ShutdownMode.OnExplicitShutdown; // merge in application resources System.Windows.Application.Current.Resources.MergedDictionaries.Add( System.Windows.Application.LoadComponent( new Uri("/Library;component/UI/WPF/Infragistics/generic.shared.xaml", UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute)) as System.Windows.ResourceDictionary); // merge in application resources System.Windows.Application.Current.Resources.MergedDictionaries.Add( System.Windows.Application.LoadComponent( new Uri("/Library;component/UI/WPF/Infragistics/XamGridCustomizations.xaml", UriKind.RelativeOrAbsolute)) as System.Windows.ResourceDictionary); } }
Any thoughts on this would be helpful.
Thank you for your response. I will continue to monitor this forum thread while I await your next update with your working example.